Hills of the Shatemuc eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 772 pages of information about Hills of the Shatemuc.

Hills of the Shatemuc eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 772 pages of information about Hills of the Shatemuc.
with books and philosophical instruments, stood towards one side of the room, a little table with a lamp at the other; and scattered about, all over, were big stout comfortable well-worn leather arm-chairs, that said study and learning sat easy there and often received visits of pleasure in that room.  Elizabeth felt herself as little akin to pleasure as to learning or study, just then.  She put herself in one of the great leather chairs, with a sense of being out of her element —­ a little piece of busy, bustling, practical life, within the very palings of science and wisdom.

She sat and waited.  But that pulse of busy life beat never the cooler for all the cool aspect of the place and the grave shade of wisdom that lingered there; nay, it throbbed faster and more flutteringly.  She got up to try the power of distraction the glass cases might hold; but her eye roved restlessly and carelessly over object and object of interest that withheld its interest from her; and weariedly she went back to her arm-chair and covered her face with her hands, that her mind might be at least uninterruptedly busy in its own way.

It must have been very busy, or the quick little step of the German professor must have been very soft withal; for he had come within a few feet of her before he knew who she was or she knew that he was there.

“Miss Elisabet’!” he exclaimed with a most good-humoured face of wonderment, —­ “I never was so honoured before!  How did you get in my arm-chair?”

Elizabeth jumped up and shook hands with him, laughing in very relief to see him come.

“How did I get here? —­ I came up through the sun, Mr. Herder.”

“I have asked you to come in better time,” said the naturalist, —­ “that is, better for you —­ dis is very good time for me.  I have nozing to do, and I will give you lesson in whatever you want.”

“No sir, —­ I am come to give you a lesson, Mr. Herder.”

Me? Well, I will take it,” said the naturalist, who began at the same time to run about his room and open closet doors and jingle glasses together, apparently on his own business, —­ “I like always to take lessons, —­ it is not often that I have such a teacher.  I will learn the best I can —­ after I have got you some lemonade.  I have two lemons here, —­ somevere, —­ ah! —­ "

“I don’t want it, Mr. Herder.”

“I cannot learn nozing till you have had it,” said Mr. Herder bringing his lemons and glasses to the table; —­ “that sun is beating my head what was beating yours, and it cannot think of nozing till I have had something to cool him off. —­”

Elizabeth sat still, and looked, and thought, with her heart beating.

“I did not know what was in my room when I see you in my chair wiz your head down —­ you must be study more hard than me, Miss Elisabet’ —­ I never put my head down, for nozing.”

“Nor your heart either, I wonder?” thought Elizabeth.

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Hills of the Shatemuc from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.